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The Jail Warden Entrance refers, in general terms, to the category of recruitment examinations conducted in India for the position of warden in correctional institutions, including district jails, central jails, sub-jails, and other custodial facilities operated under the prison administration of the various State Governments and Union Territories. Because prison administration in India is largely a State subject, the structure, eligibility, syllabus, selection stages, and recruiting authority for a Jail Warden Entrance can vary considerably from one State to another. This draft is intended as a starting framework for IndiaWiki editors to develop a verified, sourced article. It deliberately avoids citing specific dates, vacancy figures, pay scales, age limits, physical standards, syllabus components, or recruitment boards, since these particulars differ by jurisdiction and change frequently through official notifications. Editors are encouraged to consult primary sources such as State Public Service Commission notifications, Subordinate Services Selection Boards, State Police or Home Department circulars, and Directorate of Prisons advertisements before adding any concrete detail. The present draft offers neutral context, an editorial scaffold, and a checklist of items requiring verification. It is not intended for direct publication and should be reviewed, expanded, and corrected by editors with subject-matter familiarity.
The post of jail warden, sometimes also designated as prison warder, jail guard, or by an equivalent vernacular term, forms part of the subordinate uniformed cadre within India's prison services. Wardens generally undertake duties relating to the custody, supervision, escort, and welfare of inmates, in coordination with senior officers such as head wardens, jailors, and superintendents. The recruitment of wardens is typically governed by State-specific service rules framed under the relevant Prisons Act and Prison Manual applicable in that jurisdiction. The constitutional position of prisons under the State List of the Seventh Schedule means that uniform national criteria for warden recruitment do not exist; each State conducts its own examinations or selection drives, sometimes through dedicated recruitment boards and sometimes through general subordinate services examinations. The selection process commonly involves a combination of written examination, physical efficiency or measurement tests, document verification, and medical examination, though the precise sequencing, weightage, and standards differ. Editors should note that several States have, at various times, modified their recruitment patterns, including changes to syllabi, mode of examination (offline or online), and the inclusion or exclusion of interviews. Specific historical or procedural claims should be verified against dated official notifications before being incorporated.
The Jail Warden Entrance carries operational and social significance for several reasons. Firstly, it is one of the principal channels through which the lower uniformed ranks of the prison administration are staffed, directly affecting the day-to-day functioning of correctional institutions across India. Secondly, the recruitment process is closely watched by aspirants from diverse educational and socio-economic backgrounds, particularly in States where competitive opportunities in the uniformed services are limited. Thirdly, the standards adopted in such entrance processes — covering written examinations, physical fitness, and character verification — are linked, at least in principle, to the broader objectives of prison reform, inmate rehabilitation, and humane custody as articulated in successive policy discussions and committee reports. While editors may wish to reference such policy material, they should attribute any claim to a specific, identifiable source and avoid generalised statements about reform outcomes. The Jail Warden Entrance also intersects with debates around training, service conditions, gender representation in custodial staff, and the modernisation of prisons, all of which can be appropriately referenced in a finished article when supported by reliable secondary sources.
The following items should be confirmed against primary or otherwise authoritative sources before being included in the finished article. Each State's pattern may differ, and editors are advised against generalising from one jurisdiction to another:
Editors should refrain from inserting specific numerical values, dates, or named officials unless these can be cited to a current, traceable source. Where information varies by recruitment cycle, the article should make this explicit rather than presenting a single cycle's details as standing rules.
A finished IndiaWiki article on the Jail Warden Entrance could be organised along the following lines, subject to editorial discretion:
The structure should remain neutral, encyclopaedic, and clearly distinguish between settled rules and matters that vary by recruitment cycle.
This draft has been deliberately written without specific factual claims because the title and cohort alone do not provide sufficient information to identify a particular State's recruitment, year, or notification. Editors taking this draft forward are requested to: (i) decide whether the article should be a general overview covering all Indian jurisdictions or a State-specific entry, and adjust the title accordingly; (ii) gather primary documents such as official notifications, gazette entries, and departmental circulars before adding particulars; (iii) avoid relying solely on coaching websites, aggregator portals, or social media posts, which often reproduce outdated or inaccurate details; (iv) ensure that any statement about eligibility, syllabus, or process is tied to a specific notification and dated accordingly; and (v) maintain a neutral tone, avoiding promotional language about coaching, study materials, or unofficial guides. If the article is to cover multiple States, consistency of structure across sections will aid readability. Claims relating to controversies, litigation, or alleged irregularities in recruitment must be supported by reliable, attributable reporting and worded with due care. When in doubt, editors should prefer omission to speculation.
To be added by editors. Suggested categories of sources include: official notifications issued by State Public Service Commissions and Subordinate Services Selection Boards; circulars of State Directorates of Prisons and Home Departments; the relevant Prisons Act and Prison Manual of the State concerned; reports of national and State-level committees on prison administration; and reputable news reporting where it provides verifiable information. Each citation should include the issuing authority, document title, date, and a stable link or archival reference where available.